NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 Mobile CUDA Core Count Revealed, Along With Other Very Important Details

In addition to the CUDA Core count for the mobile version of NVIDIA’s GTX 1070, we have gained more insight to important details, which you’ll be thrilled to read on about.

GTX 1070 CUDA Core Count Is Higher Than That Of The Desktop Version – Very Minute Differences Difference Between The Clock Speeds As Well

According to the screenshots taken by Benchlife, the mobile version of GTX 1070 features a higher CUDA Core count than the value present in the desktop variant and what’s more is that there’s a very minute difference between the GPU clock speeds of both versions. To give you a clear insight of the sort of performance you will experience, we have listed the necessary details and differences below:

GTX 1070 Mobile

GPU Clock speed: 1443MHz

Boost Clock speed: 1645MHz

Memory Clock speed: 8008MHz

GTX 1070 Desktop

GPU Clock speed: 1506MHz

Boost Clock speed: 1683MHz

Memory Clock speed: 8008MHz

According to our previous report, the mobile version of GTX 1070 is a GP104 GPU and features a 256-bit bus width with 8GB of GDDR5 video memory. To conserve battery life, GTX 1070 too will feature a lowered TDP than its desktop counterpart, with a value of 85 watts, 65 watts lower than what the other GTX 1070 will end up consuming. Before we forget, there is one other detail that you might have missed; the leaked GPU-Z screenshots reveal an incorrect TMU value. Instead of 170, it should be 128, so we hope that we get to know about the official specification during the month of August.

Apart from the mobile version of GTX 1070, we also know about GTX 1060, and just like its desktop counterpart, this GPU too possesses minute differences, which have been listed below:

NVIDIA GTX 1060 mobile

GPU clock: 1405MHz

GPU boost clock: 1671MHz

NVIDIA GTX 1060

GPU clock: 1506MHz

GPU boost clock: 1709MHz

The only mystery GPU belonging to NVIDIA’s Pascal mobile family who’s detailed list of info still eludes us is GTX 1080. We know that GDDR5X is not going to be a part of the configuration, and we also know that the mobile version is going to feature lowered clock speeds, which will end up bringing that TDP value down considerably. However, the biggest surprise for us today concerning the GTX 1070 GPU for notebooks has to be its CUDA Core.

This is the first time we’re seeing that a mobile version possess a higher core count than the desktop variant, and we hope that the succeeding architecture will eliminate this gap once and for all.